A look at the Dolphins’ 2023 and future assortment of draft picks

Miami has draft capital, but they could use more.

The NFL Combine is set to wrap up on Sunday when the offensive linemen and running backs take the field for workouts. As this process nears its conclusion, the true start of the 2023 NFL season is essentially under ten days away.

Free agency and trading periods open up in mid-March, and madness will soon ensue. Free agents will re-sign, some will go to new teams and perhaps trades will occur – all leading to April’s NFL draft.

When looking at the draft pick arsenal, the Miami Dolphins’ war chest is not as full as in years past. Even last year’s draft saw limited selections with just four.

In 2021, the Dolphins made a normal class amount of seven selections, with a top-heavy core of Jaylen Waddle, Jaelan Phillips and Jevon Holland. Last year’s rookie foursome, really didn’t make a collective impact. Although Skylar Thompson saw multiple starts, including a playoff game, third-round linebacker Channing Tindall and fourth-round wide receiver Erik Ezukanma barely saw the field, and seventh-round pick Cameron Goode is on a futures deal.

So while general manager Chris Grier and head coach Mike McDaniel are gathering their notes together from the past week in Indianapolis, it’s a good time to look at what they are working with in terms of immediate and near-future draft capital.

During April’s draft, Miami will, of course, be without a first-round pick for the second straight year. Miami once possessed a pair of them for 2023, but one was traded to the Denver Broncos in exchange for Bradley Chubb, and the other was taken away from the league for tampering.

They’ll start their selection process at the moment with pick No. 51 in the second round and follow up with a pair of third-rounders, Nos. 77 and 84. The Dolphins then have a long gap, since they sent their 2023 fourth-round pick along with last year’s first in the Tyreek Hill acquisition.

This upcoming draft’s fifth-round pick was turned into Jeff Wilson Jr. and is now owned by the San Fransisco 49ers. That additional third-round pick, No. 77 to be exact, came from New England as part of the DeVante Parker deal from 2022.

Miami also has a sixth-rounder (No. 178) which was compensation from Chicago in 2021’s trade for Jakeem Grant to the Bears. The Dolphins close their draft in the seventh at No. 240.

It will be interesting to see if Grier will utilize current players to attempt to slide back into certain rounds, and/or move up on the board. Of course, he could decide to move down and recoup later picks should he look to turn one of those top three picks into deals that could get Miami back into rounds four and/or five this year.

Looking at the current roster, there could be several players that are candidates for Grier to look to move, cut some salary and, perhaps, obtain picks that were vacated, for whatever reason.

Here’s a further look at the next two seasons of those draft picks as we stand now.

2024 Miami Dolphins Draft selections:

  • First round
  • Second round
  • Fifth round
  • Sixth round
  • Seventh round

They’re without a third, as it was the other pick lost in tampering, and their fourth-rounder went to Denver in that Chubb deal.

In 2025, Miami is back to having a standard draft with all of their owned picks and even heavy one fifth-rounder, which was sent as a sweetener along with Chubb from the Broncos.

2025 Miami Dolphins Draft selections:

  • First round
  • Second round
  • Third round
  • Fourth Round
  • Fifth Round
  • Fifth round (via DEN)
  • Sixth round
  • Seventh round

There’ll be plenty of options and variables upcoming for Grier, McDaniel and the Dolphins, and as this front office has shown, they are not afraid to make a deal. The NFL draft is from April 27 through 29 and will take place in Kansas City, Missouri.

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NFL writer lists Miami’s biggest free agent decision of the offseason

Miami has 31 players set to hit the market.

After reportedly agreeing to terms with Vic Fangio to become their new defensive coordinator, the Miami Dolphins have a ton of work to do this offseason to finalize their coaching staff and roster for the 2023 season.

On the field, Miami has 31 players who are set to hit free agency, and while not all are difference makers, there are certainly some key contributors in the bunch.

With all of the moves that could happen this offseason, the 33rd Team’s Ari Meirov listed the biggest decision that each team will have to make regarding their own free agents. For the Dolphins, Meirov chose the running back duo of Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson Jr., who both saw some success in their first season in South Florida.

Here’s what Meirov wrote:

“The Dolphins currently don’t have a running back under contract for next season. They signed Mostert last year and traded for Wilson before the deadline – and both players have familiarity with coach Mike McDaniel from their days in San Francisco. Mostert had more than 1,000 yards from scrimmage, while Wilson had 94 carries for 515 yards and four touchdowns in nine games with the team. Considering the familiarity, Miami likely will focus on bringing at least one of them back for next season.”

The Dolphins aren’t exactly known for their big spending at the running back position, so it would make more sense to try and keep one of their own on a cost-effective deal or draft one rather than pay a top-of-market deal to one of the better free agent backs.

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Dolphins approach offseason with little cap space and an empty backfield

Miami isn’t always aggressive when it comes to the position.

Usually, in football, when you hear the term “empty backfield,” it simply means five wide receivers are at the quarterback’s disposal. In the case of the 2023 Miami Dolphins, at the moment, they literally have an empty running back room.

Once the Dolphins lost to the Buffalo Bills during Super Wild Card Weekend, the contracts of pending free agents expired, including those of Raheem Mostert, Jeff Wilson Jr., Salvon Ahmed and Myles Gaskin.

Coupled with what is one of the most talent-rich running back free agent classes in years, Miami will be active in their due diligence to re-sign a recently rostered back and/or sign a runner off the market.

Before anything is done, in terms of fishing in the pool of candidates, general manager Chris Grier and salary cap guru Brandon Shore have work ahead of them to get financially prepared to reel in talent and retain as well. A total of 31 players from Miami’s 2022 team enter the market, so there’ll be plenty of paperwork and number crunching in the early stages of the offseason.

Not only do the Dolphins have big contracts to hopefully restructure, namely Tyreek Hill and Xavien Howard, but there are also potential deals that could be made to send some contracts out, most importantly, cornerback Byron Jones.

Jones didn’t play a snap for Miami in 2022, and with a contract that’s valued at $13.5 million for 2023, it’s safe to say the sides could part ways. Even a minor deal for some sort of draft capital would be worth its weight in cap savings for the aqua and orange.

Looking around the Dolphins roster, there could be another candidate or two to phone franchises to see if their services would be needed. Grier has shown he has no problem being aggressive, with a dash of patience, and has no problem making multiple moves as swiftly as Michael Corleone consolidated his power at the end of “The Godfather.”

While it’s doubtful Grier and Shore will be handing out offers running backs can’t refuse, Dolphin fans should be weary of hoping for the premier running backs in this class. The New York Giants have a decision to make regarding Saquon Barkley, and a few more NFC East runners in Philadelphia Eagle Miles Sanders and Tony Pollard of the Dallas Cowboys could be wearing new uniforms next season as well.

Adding to this class is Josh Jacobs, Kareem Hunt, David Montgomery, Jamaal Williams, Rashaad Penny and Jerick McKinnon. Moving a bit down the pecking order but more so in the aisle and price range of Grier and Shore, as they’ve proven, are names like Alexander Mattison and Devin Singletary.

While the luxury of having a running back like the top-portions of this list is welcomed, it may not be in the cards if Miami were to focus on their other team needs such as linebackers (they have five free agents from last year’s team) and offensive line.

They also have to keep money aside to extend defensive lineman Christian Wilkins, whose fifth-year option should not only be picked up for 2023 but added several years and dollars on top of it to lock him into Miami Gardens so his growth can continue into an elite overall defender.

And, of course, money will have to be kept aside and accounted for the quarterback position. Meaning, if Tua Tagovailoa’s fifth-year option is picked up, it may as well be an extension. However, if it’s not, huge money will have to attract a veteran signal-caller on the market, but that’s a conversation many wish to not have.

As the playoffs continue for four more NFL teams, the business of the other 28 won’t stop, and you can bet that Grier and Shore are already projecting and modeling the immediate future of the Dolphins.

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Back pay: Dolphins’ Jeff Wilson Jr. earns bonuses for 49ers advancing through playoffs

He could earn six figures if they keep winning.

When the Miami Dolphins acquired running back Jeff Wilson Jr. from the San Francisco 49ers at the trade deadline, they got a strong runner who could be a great complement to Raheem Mostert.

Wilson played in eight games for Miami, rushing for 392 yards and three touchdowns on an impressive 4.7-yard average.

Even though his current team has been eliminated from the postseason, his former team is still alive, and each time they win, he receives bonuses.

According to CBS Sports’ Joel Corry, Wilson earned $69,000 because the 49ers advanced to the NFC championship game. If the 49ers were to defeat the Philadelphia Eagles, Wilson would be guaranteed another $82,000. That could actually turn into $157,000 with a 49ers title.

It was already rather likely that Wilson would support his former teammates in this upcoming matchup, but, with money on the line, there’s even more of a reason for the North Texas product to root for San Francisco.

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What’s next for the Miami Dolphins after elimination?

Miami may look to make changes on the field and on the coaching staff.

As the eight remaining playoff teams get set for their weekend matchups, the Miami Dolphins front office and brain trust start their preparation for the 2023 season.

Following last Sunday’s playoff loss to the Buffalo Bills, head coach Mike McDaniel enters his first offseason process in ending a season and assessing players along with the people he hired or inherited on his staff.

This will be the first time in his career and, of course, with Miami, that McDaniel will work with the powers that be following a head-coaching performance and renovate the roster and staff while building at the same time.

On the player end of things, 31 Dolphins from this season will enter free agency. Of the big names in this group, tight end Mike Gesicki will likely have a number of suitors who’ll utilize him to the maximum of his ability and skill set. After posting a heartfelt message on social media, Gesicki, in a vague way, that while he loves Miami and is appreciative of the Dolphins, it appears the honeymoon is over.

Backup quarterback Teddy Bridgewater is also a free agent, and it’s not expected that he’ll be back in Miami Gardens next season following a year of injuries and underperformance. Staying on the offensive side of the ball, every single running back who recorded a carry for Miami in 2022, is now a free agent.

Raheem Mostert, Salvon Ahmed, Myles Gaskin and in-season addition Jeff Wilson, Jr. could all be on different teams next season, but it’s too early to speculate. With a loaded free agent running back class, the Dolphins could focus there, however, paying top dollar for a runner isn’t something that Chris Grier has proven to be in the market for in his tenure.

McDaniel brought a pair of San Fransisco wide receivers with him to Miami, River Cracraft and Trent Sherfield, and now they’re both free agents.

Defensively, the Dolphins have decisions to make regarding the homegrown talents of linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel and cornerback Nik Needham. Van Ginkel, a 2019 fifth-round draft pick out of Wisconsin is a valuable two-unit player for Miami, excelling on special teams and, more importantly, in the outside linebacker rotation for the Dolphins in a loaded room.

Needham was undrafted in that same year of 2019, and although initially cut, the Dolphins rewarded him a practice squad spot followed by an in-season promotion. Through trials by fire and social media, Needham worked to become a fixture in the Dolphins lineup as a second-year player in 2020, and, in 2021, he was one of the NFL’s top slot cornerbacks.

Needham suffered an Achilles injury in Week 6 against the Minnesota Vikings, and although a free agent now, and rehabbing ahead of schedule. He even told reporters that Miami has communicated that they have plans for him and are interested in bringing him back.

Both will have suitors beyond the Dolphins, as Needham was recently signed by Athletes First, a top-tier agency representing a long list of NFL talent. Van Ginkel is also being courted by heavy-hitting representation, so these are situations to track this offseason.

Veteran defenders such as captain Elandon Roberts, Melvin Ingram, Eric Rowe and Duke Riley enter free agency, so that makes four free-agent linebackers who saw significant snaps in 2022. You can add in a fifth in Sam Eguavoen as well.

The Dolphins inked punter Thomas Morstead to a one-year deal last offseason. He had a fine year on the field and became a fan favorite off of it. Miami would be wise to throw another one-year deal his way with his work ethic and leadership.

There are a number of other veteran free agents Miami has decisions to make on, as well as coaching. McDaniel brought in his offensive coaching staff upon being hired in Miami, but essentially inherited the defensive crew, led by coordinator Josh Boyer.

Boyer was originally hired by former head coach Brian Flores. While last season had a bit of controversy as to who exactly was running the show on defense regarding play-calling, Boyer was retained last offseason despite the firing of Flores.

UPDATE: Boyer was fired on Thursday, along with three members of his staff.

This season, a talented Dolphins defense was underwhelming through the course of the season but did sustain a slew of significant injuries to key players. Emmanuel Ogbah, Brandon Jones, Needham and not to mention the Byron Jones saga, all led to Boyer playing with a limited deck.

Miami finished 2022 18th in total defense and 24th in scoring defense. The main issue was on third downs, as they were tied for the NFL’s 24th-ranked unit here, and, many times throughout the season, it was key conversions that plagued the Dolphins.

At the moment, it’s not confirmed one way or another if Boyer will be retained, and another coach where the speculation is flying is special teams coordinator Danny Crossman. The Dolphins ranked near the bottom of the league in special teams categories.

Now that 24 teams are looking to 2023, the coaching carousel is underway, but the timetables will be anybody’s guess on what, when, who and how this will play out from a staffing side.

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How the Dolphins can keep up with the Bills in their wild-card battle

It would take a lot of things going right for the visiting team.

The Miami Dolphins head into Orchard Park as one of the biggest underdogs in playoff history. Not only will they be without their starting quarterback, starting running back and a plethora of other critical contributors, but they will face a Buffalo Bills team that seems to be destined for a deep playoff run.

Thankfully, safety Damar Hamlin was released from the hospital and is progressing remarkably well following the horrific collapse following a tackle during Monday Night Football back in Week 17.

Ironically, Miami owes a bit of gratitude to the Bills, as their victory last week against the New England Patriots clinched Miami’s berth into the postseason.

In what was a cinematic start to the game, return man Nyheim Hines took the opening kick-off to the house. Later in the game, he answered a Patriots field goal with another trip for six on the ensuing kickoff.

The Bills and their crowd expect to not only beat the Dolphins, but as the climate on social media indicates, it should be a blowout indicative of the 14-point spread.

While major upsets have happened in this league, certainly a Miami victory with a seventh-round rookie quarterback in Skylar Thompson would be one for the books.

In addition to the obvious lack of experience, Thompson has shown struggles of a rookie in his appearances in the regular season, yet he did just enough to help put Miami in a position to beat the Jets in Week 18. Placekicker Jason Sanders did his job to a tee, and Thompson didn’t necessarily do anything to lose the game.

This one in Buffalo will be different.

With the news on Friday that Dolphins running back Raheem Mostert will be out on Sunday with a thumb injury, the backfield will belong to Jeff Wilson Jr. and Salvon Ahmed.

Acquired from the San Fransisco 49ers prior to the trade deadline, Wilson has shown sparks of excellence in both aqua and orange as well as red and gold. Wilson has averaged 4.7 yards per carry as a Dolphin this season. In addition, when he carries the ball 16 times or more in a game, the team he played for is/was 5-0. Three occurrences came when on the 49ers and two while a Dolphin. In those games, he averaged 5.4 yards per carry, 93.8 yards per game and scored three touchdowns.

The Dolphins must lean on Wilson, as well as Ahmed, who averages 5.3 yards per carry this season in limited work, to have success against the Bills.

This mainly needs to be done to support Thompson as a rookie on the road against a Super Bowl contender in a hostile environment. Secondly, a strong running game could and should present opportunities for timely throws and potential play-action passes, which Thompson does pretty well, fundamentally.

Then, of course, enter Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle. Establishing the run, and putting Thompson in position for quick and easy throws to these two top-five NFL receivers, could be Miami’s best bet.

A strong ground presence will also keep Josh Allen, Stefon Diggs and the potent Bills attack off the field, while the Dolphins’ defense gets a chance to save their energy for the latter portions of the game. Meaning, if the game is close in the fourth, Josh Boyer’s unit must get the Bills’ offense off the field on third downs, and hopefully, more time resting, rather than chasing Allen around.

Boyer, Miami’s defensive coordinator, has to essentially call the game of his life to help keep the Dolphins in this contest. The strength of this Miami defense is the defensive line, with the play of Christian Wilkins and Zach Sieler, particularly against the run.

While the Dolphins have not given up 100 yards or more to a running back this season, they had allowed Allen to rush for 77 yards a few weeks back during their last-second victory over Miami in Week 15. They must come up with timely stops, especially on third-and-medium or longer. A first down picked up by the legs of any quarterback would be terrible to allow, let alone giving extended scoring chances for an offense like Buffalo’s.

The Dolphins also have 33 players who have never seen an NFL snap in the playoffs. It is this, an underdog mindset and a Kansas State Wildcat quarterback that could mesh well with head coach Mike McDaniel when trying to cook up an upset. After all, McDaniel is an Ivy League graduate and an advertised offensive genius who needs to empty the playbook on Sunday.

The road to an away playoff victory in Buffalo will be far from an easy task, but there is a glimmer of hope, and that is the underdog mindset that basically has Miami playing with house money. All the pressure will be on Buffalo to not lose the game; nearly every person in the world expects them to win.

If the ball bounces a certain way once or twice for Miami, and plans are executed properly, competitive fourth-quarter playoff football is what Dolphins fans could see on Sunday.

The question is…will they?

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News, notes from Dolphins’ Week 18 over Jets, clinched postseason berth

A few things to know following the victory.

It wasn’t pretty, and it wasn’t for the faint of heart, but the Miami Dolphins not only beat the New York Jets, but they also received the necessary help from the Buffalo Bills, beating the New England Patriots, to send the Dolphins into the postseason.

For the first time since 2016, the Dolphins will participate in the playoffs, and thanks to an 11-6 victory on the strength of three Jason Sanders field goals and a last-second safety to close it out, Miami will claim the seventh seed in the AFC side of the playoff bracket to face the Bills in Buffalo next weekend. 

The Dolphins relied on a stingy rush defense, as the unit only allowed the Jets to rush for 38 yards, an average of 1.9 per carry. Inversely, the Dolphins were dominant on the ground, rushing 32 times for a total of 162 yards, a 5.1 yards per carry average. Jeff Wilson Jr led the way with 72 yards of 16 carries and Raheem Mostert ran tough for his 71, an average of 6.5 yards per run.

While the ground game was working, and Sanders was perfect on his kicks, rookie third-stringer quarterback Skylar Thompson did just enough in timely spots to help the Dolphins earn a victory. He was 20 for 30 passing for 152 yards, a passer rating of 76.3, and no touchdowns or turnovers.

He did hang tough in the pocket several times and completed numerous third downs in key spots. Of course conversation for later in the week will be the availability of Tua Tagovailoa, who missed the last two games while being in concussion protocol.

Flipping back to the defensive side of the ball, the Dolphins pressured Jets quarterback Joe Flacco and while didn’t record a sack, hit him 10 times. Cornerback Xavien Howard did have a rough game overall, but on the last drive clamped down for a pair of passes defended and rookie Kader Kohou was once again solid in his coverage. The undrafted defensive back finished with a pair of passes defended and Howard totaled three.

Christian Wilkins recorded 6 tackles and he is Miami’s single-season leader for defensive lineman tackles in a season with 98, breaking Jeff Cross’ record from 1993 of 93. Second-year sensation Jaelan Phillips was again all over the place, recording four hits on Flacco on his own.

Now that Miami has made the playoffs, the focus moves to Buffalo, and whether or not Tagovailoa will be under center either Saturday or Sunday, pending the NFL’s playoff schedule for Super Wild-Card weekend.

Again, that is an entirely other conversation.

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Notes heading into an all-important weekend for Dolphins

A few things to note for Week 18.

In what has been nothing short of a rollercoaster ride of a season, the Miami Dolphins find themselves at 8-8 with one game to play, and their playoff hopes are not all in their control.

While a win against their AFC East rival New York Jets is paramount, of course, the postseason will not be a reality unless the New England Patriots lose to the Buffalo Bills in Orchard Park on Sunday – a game being played simultaneously to Miami’s.

How we all got here following an 8-3 start isn’t a blame that can be put on one person or one unit. The 3-0 start was met with a trio of losses following the injury situations plaguing the Miami quarterbacks, let alone several key injuries on defense that seemed to be one key name after another, week after week.

Regardless of the controversy and playing defense with second-stringers in key areas, especially the secondary, the Dolphins were still able to rattle off a five-game winning streak, only to follow up with the five-game losing rut they find themselves in heading into Week 18.

Despite the trials and tribulations that this team has gone through, led by a rookie head coach in Mike McDaniel, Miami still has the opportunity to have a third straight winning season, a franchise feat that hasn’t been seen in essentially twenty years (2001-03).

When looking at the all-time series in this rivalry, it’s dead even, as the teams are 56-56-1 in regular-season play. Miami did win the lone playoff meeting between the two.

Recently, in Miami, the Dolphins have won six straight home games against the Jets, and a win Sunday would set the all-time series record for consecutive home wins with seven.

How will Miami be able to get that win? They face a Jets team with no chance at the playoffs but an opportunity to eliminate a rival, as well as head into the 2023 offseason on a positive note, following their own breakdown of a season.

Starting for the Dolphins will likely be the rookie seventh-round quarterback, Skylar Thompson, who, even after a solid preseason, has proved that in the NFL regular season, he isn’t at Kansas State anymore.

Miami even signed veteran journeyman backup Mike Glennon to the practice squad on Wednesday.

For the Dolphins to be successful against the league’s third-best unit in defense, they’d be wise to utilize the ground game. The Jets hold opponents to 192.5 yards per game through the passing attack, which is second in the NFL. On the flip side, they are a bit more vulnerable against the run, ranking 16th in the league, giving up 119.1 yards on the ground per game.

Enter the Dolphins running back duo of Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson Jr. At times throughout the season, each has shown brilliance. Although the consistency and volume have not been there week-to-week or even quarter-to-quarter, each back holds a very respectable per-carry average. Mostert is gaining 4.8 yards per run and Wilson is rushing for 4.7. If you want to count Salvon Ahmed, he’s averaging 5.2 yards per carry when he makes a cameo.

Collectively, the Dolphins need to keep the ball on the ground, extend drives, keep their injury-riddled defense off the field and make life easy for Thompson. These are all obvious statements.

Thompson also has the riches of Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle, so quick hits to them and letting each use their yards-after-catch ability could be the recipe for success; extended run plays so to speak.

Defensively, last week Miami was down Bradley Chubb and Xavien Howard, and their status as of Wednesday’s official practice report was no improvement, as they did not participate.

On the field, and perhaps the Dolphins’ 2022 seasonal defensive MVP has been Christian Wilkins. The fourth-year defensive lineman has put together two straight campaigns of elite output at the position. He is two tackles away from breaking the Dolphins’ all-time record in a season at his position. Held by Jeff Cross with 93 from 1993, Wilkins currently has 92. The third most tackles in a season for Miami happened last season, also by Christian Wilkins.

Since 1994, just two NFL defensive linemen have recorded more tackles than Wilkins’ 92 tackles in a season. He has a chance to surpass both Dallas Cowboy Anthony Spencer from 1992 and Arizona’s Michael Bankston from 1997 with at least four tackles on Sunday.

Additionally, he is tied for seventh among NFL defensive linemen with 15 tackles for loss this season and has recorded a tackle for loss in 11 of his 16 games played so far.

Surrounding Wilkins as the strength of the defense, and in closest proximity, has been Zach Sieler, who has been playing fantastic within the interior of the line. Jaelan Phillips has also been proving his worth, leading the Dolphins in sacks and quarterback hits.

Veteran captain Elandon Roberts at the linebacker position has also been solid this season, racking up his 100th tackle last week, reaching that milestone for the first time in his career.

The secondary has been the unit that has been affected the most, with consecutive injuries in back-to-back weeks coming from Nik Needam and Brandon Jones. Of course, the invisible elephant in the locker room is the Byron Jones situation, and it doesn’t help that Howard has not been healthy, nor his usual self this season. Undrafted rookie cornerback Kader Kohou has had an outstanding freshman campaign and played himself into solidifying himself into the Dolphins’ future.

As a unit, the Dolphins’ defense, and its leadership must reach down deep, and scheme up a plan to stop a Jets team who would very much enjoy a potential sweep, and a sweep in a way that can brush Miami from the playoffs.

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Dolphins RB still considers team to be a ‘top dog’ in the NFL

They haven’t exactly played like it.

The Miami Dolphins have dropped four games in a row, losing to the San Francisco 49ers, Los Angeles Chargers, Buffalo Bills and Green Bay Packers in consecutive weeks.

For a team that was once the top seed in the conference, a fall to the eighth seed while clawing to stay in is a tough realization.

However, members of the organization, such as running back Jeff Wilson Jr., still have faith that this team can make some noise in the postseason.

“Oh, we’re a contender,” Wilson said. “We’re a top dog, not only in this division or conference, but in the league. And obviously, when your record and the wins and losses don’t reflect that, it’s frustrating because it’s more so not only that we’re not good enough, it’s things that are almost self-inflicted – like we do it to ourselves, almost. So when you have it like that, it makes it even more painful, because you’re just a detail or two away. Especially coming towards this time of the year, details matter.”

Miami has two weeks to prove that they belong in the playoffs for the first time since 2016. They haven’t looked great, but they’re always just one big play away at all times, and those are possible because of the number of playmakers that they have on the roster.

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Dolphins RB Jeff Wilson Jr. carted to locker room

He recorded a 20-yard run on the play.

The Miami Dolphins have been dealing with injuries all season, so they’re pretty used to not having starters at this point.

During the second quarter of the Dolphins’ Sunday night matchup with the Los Angeles Chargers, running back Jeff Wilson Jr. suffered a hip injury on a run that totaled 20 yards. After being taken to the sidelines, Wilson was eventually carted back to the locker room at SoFi Stadium.

Miami shared that his return to action is questionable.

With Myles Gaskin inactive this week, the Dolphins will have to rely on Raheem Mostert and Salvon Ahmed if Wilson is unable to re-enter the game.

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